Form over content?

Aurore 2022-04-23 07:02:26

The form of the stage play is too strong and too deliberate. Although Anna in the original book is too slender and pessimistic to be neurotic, she is mostly reserved and elegant. How can she be like this woman who is always smiling and naive and yelling when something happens? Maybe it's the director's request? Anyway, apart from the heroine, this play has some personality, and the other actors except Jude Law have no spirituality at all. The acting skills, especially after I finished watching "Les Miserables" first, it is also a stage-style movie adapted from a famous book, "Sad" The acting skills inside made "An" soar.
The scene is very delicate and gorgeous, perhaps using "gorgeous" is not accurate enough, it is gorgeous. After a long experience, it turns out that ordinary feature films can also produce a "visual gluttony" effect. Originally, I thought that only sci-fi and fantasy films could do it without violation. (For example, "Youth Pie", "Avatar", "The Matrix")
Jude Law is a beauty and twilight. The commonality of the middle-aged man may be acting, but the bald head can only be like his own aging. I never thought that Jude Law would play "Old Man" one day. Before watching the film, I always thought that he was playing Anna's adulterer in this play. When I found out that he was playing a real husband, I called oh My god
started gracefully but is a little pedantic because of self-discipline, an old-fashioned nobleman who doesn't want to believe that his wife cheated, so he justly argues with a green hat, his hatred, his anger, his forgiveness, his entanglement, his sadness ... The green-hatted husband in this play is much more addictive than the original, like old wine, it has no fragrant smell, and the taste is not amazing. Only when you taste it carefully can you find the benefits.
The male pig's feet playing the adulterer is young, beautiful, delicate, elegant, tall and sturdy, but it seems to have no content, just like his white military uniform used to participate in the dance, the beauty is beautiful, and there is no content.
But if I were Anna, I would probably choose adulterers. People are superficial and always obsessed with that superficial color. This is the most primitive desire
. I can't comment on the heroine's performance in this play. I can only say that Jude Law's green hat is the most spiritual character in the whole play. The characters and emotions are well captured.

The form can get four stars? But the content, only Samsung
is better than the version of Sophie Marceau, Sophie Marceau has a better grasp of the role, but the one who cooperated with her

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Extended Reading
  • Hailee 2022-03-29 09:01:03

    1. The innovation of stage effects is very commendable, but this kind of innovation is only suitable for old classics that have been adapted countless times; 2. If the status of "Anna" is elevated to a universal level, it will be tolerated by those laymen who deliberately show off (Levin returned to the countryside on Kizhi Island, and the church behind him has 23 roofs); 3. But the choice of actors, the shape is really terrible: the fart-like Voronsky, Rasputin-like Levin of...

  • Addison 2021-12-18 08:01:10

    The director is quite capable, and there are so many familiar faces in British dramas that are horrifying; Kayla has been wearing a street prostitute hairstyle that makes people unable to look directly; Jude Law leaned in front of Kayla’s bed, but Kayla greeted Aaron to come over, I heard Someone behind him exclaimed, "This woman is so cheap", until Aaron leaned on his bald fur shoulders and wept. In short, Nima has Jude Law as her husband, how could it be possible to have an affair? ? ?

Anna Karenina quotes

  • Alexei Karenin: [Anna is in bed. Alexie Karenin is getting ready for bed. Anna listens apprehensively to the little noises of Karenin's pre-coital preparations] ... not that I care for decorations but...

    Anna Karenina: Alexei... I can't... I'm sorry... But I'm his wife now. I am having his child.

  • Anna Karenina: But I'm damned anyway.

    Count Vronsky: I'm not. I'm blessed.

    Anna Karenina: You love me.

    Count Vronsky: Yes.

    Anna Karenina: Only me.

    Count Vronsky: No.

    Anna Karenina: Apart from Frou-Frou.

    Count Vronsky: Yes.

    Anna Karenina: But me more than your horse?

    Count Vronsky: Yes.